
Kirigami Patterning of MXene/Bacterial Cellulose Composite Paper for All‐Solid‐State Stretchable Micro‐Supercapacitor Arrays
Author(s) -
Jiao Shangqing,
Zhou Aiguo,
Wu Mingzai,
Hu Haibo
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
advanced science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.388
H-Index - 100
ISSN - 2198-3844
DOI - 10.1002/advs.201900529
Subject(s) - materials science , supercapacitor , micropower , composite number , microelectronics , nanotechnology , fabrication , bacterial cellulose , capacitance , composite material , electrode , cellulose , medicine , power (physics) , chemistry , physics , alternative medicine , quantum mechanics , pathology , chemical engineering , engineering
Stretchable micropower sources with high energy density and stability under repeated tensile deformation are key components of flexible/wearable microelectronics. Herein, through the combination of strain engineering and modulation of the interlayer spacing, freestanding and lightweight MXene/bacterial cellulose (BC) composite papers with excellent mechanical stability and a high electrochemical performance are first designed and prepared via a facile all‐solution‐based paper‐making process. Following a simple laser‐cutting kirigami patterning process, bendable, twistable, and stretchable all‐solid‐state micro‐supercapacitor arrays (MSCAs) are further fabricated. As expected, benefiting from the high‐performance MXene/BC composite electrodes and rational sectional structural design, the resulting kirigami MSCAs exhibit a high areal capacitance of 111.5 mF cm −2 , and are stable upon stretching of up to 100% elongation, and in bent or twisted states. The demonstrated combination of an all‐solution‐based MXene/BC composite paper‐making method and an easily manipulated laser‐cutting kirigami patterning technique enables the fabrication of MXene‐based deformable all‐solid‐state planar MSCAs in a simple and efficient manner while achieving excellent areal performance metrics and high stretchability, making them promising micropower sources that are compatible with flexible/wearable microelectronics.